Blog Entry

jasondea's picture
blog
Reads:

3492

Score:
4
4
1
 
Comments:

7

This thing feels like plastic

Author Info

26 July 2010 - 9:44am
Submitted by: jasondea

(View Disclaimer)

I’ve been playing the guitar since I was 12 years old. I was lucky that I have a father who’s also been playing for many years. He has always had a nice collection of Fender and Gibson guitars, and ever since I learned how to play an open E chord, I’ve been lucky enough to be spoiled by the sound and feel of some of the best instruments.

About 10 years ago, I was young and naïve, and was sold by marketing hype on a newer better design for an electric guitar from a company called Parker. The slick glossies that I came across had me salivating at the thought of a new and better way to play my music. Could these things actually make me a better musician?

Alas, once I had a chance to get in to my local music store, and pulled a brand new Parker Fly off the wall, and played the first few bars of Bark at The Moon I was sadly disappointed. To me, it felt like a piece of plastic and really added nothing to my music playing experience. If anything these new super light guitars made my playing worse. This clearly wasn’t making me a better musician.

This was a tremendously important lesson to me. Innovation for the sake of innovation has little value. The world of enterprise software is ripe with vendors making this mistake. The latest example of this to me is Cloud Computing. I think vendors need to take a step back and really ask themselves - Will this help organizations do things in a better or easier way? Virtualization has been so disruptive to the world of enterprise software, that vendors are in a state of catch-up, and most are trying to make up for their deficits with more jargon.

I think vendors need to first ask more questions, and make fewer statements.
Can automation be used to help IT managers improve efficiency without sounding like outsourcing? Can user identity be a point of access control that can be the key to leveraging shared internet resources? I think these are the conversations that need to happen today. How do you readers out there feel about the promises being made by cloud computing? Are we in the midst of a large marketing exercise, or can these new technology help us all to do better business?

I for one don’t believe anyone is in the market for another plastic guitar…


Disclaimer: As with everything else at Cool Solutions, this content is definitely not supported by Novell (so don't even think of calling Support if you try something and it blows up).

It was contributed by a community member and is published "as is." It seems to have worked for at least one person, and might work for you. But please be sure to test, test, test before you do anything drastic with it.




User Comments

amarquezxc's picture

Thanks!

Submitted by amarquezxc on 28 July 2010 - 9:52am.

Jason,
Very nice post. I completely agree with your conclusion but sadly I cannot even play a guitar in Rockband :-|

dgersic's picture

What's old is new again

Submitted by dgersic on 28 July 2010 - 1:45pm.

"Cloud computing" seems to be the new marketting speak for "your data and your applications that use it live on a remote host that you don't own, other organizations also have data and applications on this host, and you pay for the priviledge of using part of its resources". Back in the 1970s, we called this "time sharing". We had "virtual machines" when I was a college student. We had "thin" clients, too, but we called them "terminals" back then. None of this is truly "new" technology, just some of the same old ideas being repackaged.

jasondea's picture

I agree completely. SaaS as

Submitted by jasondea on 30 July 2010 - 6:25am.

I agree completely. SaaS as well I see as recycling of the ASP market that was supposed to explode 10-15 years ago.

ecyoung's picture

Re: What's old is new again

Submitted by ecyoung on 30 July 2010 - 11:35am.

"None of this is truly "new" technology, just some of the same old ideas being repackaged."

Yes, repackaged, with a new price tag.

jsauve's picture

And what's with the "Private Cloud"??

Submitted by jsauve on 29 July 2010 - 1:50pm.

I agree Jason! I don't quite get the whole "cloud" thing, yet.

I recently read that a large percentage of companies (80%?) said they were planning to deploy a "private cloud" within the next couple of years.

Uh...isn't that what we've been calling a Corporate LAN for thirty years, now??!

jasondea's picture

It's interesting, it seems as

Submitted by jasondea on 30 July 2010 - 6:28am.

It's interesting, it seems as though cloud computing is proving that everything old is new again. I suppose all these concepts have been around for years, but to me the core foundation technology that has finally caught up to allow cloud to become real is significantly more robust networking. Then again I suppose governments were talking about laying down national fibre optic lines 20 years ago!

darrellwtfs's picture

cloud

Submitted by darrellwtfs on 3 August 2010 - 9:53am.

Not familiar with cloud computing but I'm sure it's just another gimmick to sell to corporations

© 2013 Novell